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Treading Water: Tire Wear Particle Leachate Recreates an Urban Runoff Mortality Syndrome in Coho but Not Chum Salmon.

Environmental science & technology 2021 Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
Jenifer K McIntyre, Jasmine Prat, James Cameron, Jillian Wetzel, Emma Mudrock, Katherine T Peter, Zhenyu Tian, Cailin Mackenzie, Jessica Lundin, John D Stark, Kennith King, Jay W Davis, Edward P. Kolodziej, Nathaniel L Scholz

Summary

Leachate from tire tread wear particles was found to cause acute mortality in coho salmon following rain events, reproducing the 'urban runoff mortality syndrome' seen in wild fish — while chum salmon were unaffected. The responsible chemical was identified as 6PPD-quinone, a tire additive, demonstrating that microplastic-related chemical leachates can devastate specific wildlife populations.

Polymers

Tire tread wear particles (TWP) are increasingly recognized as a global pollutant of surface waters, but their impact on biota in receiving waters is rarely addressed. In the developed U.S. Pacific Northwest, acute mortality of adult coho salmon () follows rain events and is correlated with roadway density. Roadway runoff experimentally triggers behavioral symptoms and associated changes in blood indicative of cardiorespiratory distress prior to death. Closely related chum salmon () lack an equivalent response. Acute mortality of juvenile coho was recently experimentally linked to a transformation product of a tire-derived chemical. We evaluated whether TWP leachate is sufficient to trigger the acute mortality syndrome in adult coho salmon. We characterized the acute response of adult coho and chum salmon to TWP leachate (survival, behavior, blood physiology) and compared it with that caused by roadway runoff. TWP leachate was acutely lethal to coho at concentrations similar to roadway runoff, with the same behaviors and blood parameters impacted. As with runoff, chum salmon appeared insensitive to TWP leachate at concentrations lethal to coho. Our results confirm that environmentally relevant TWP exposures cause acute mortalities of a keystone aquatic species.

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